Matrocksmysocks
New Member
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2006
- Messages
- 16
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2007
I've been thinking a lot lately about the outcomes-based system for the HSC... and how it stinks.
Our Headmaster described the HSC as being like 'a series of driving tests' - where if you say what they want to hear, you get marks.
It's not a test of excellence, where they best essay gets 50 (or lower if the quality isn't there), and all others are judged off that one.
For example, a guy in my English class wrote an exceptionally good essay for Critical Study of Texts, pulling to pieces certain critics crtiques whilst espousing his own view.
And yet, because he did not write that the views he dismissed were still worthy as critiques (BOS requirement) - because that would be entirely contradictory to his exceptional argument - he was docked about 4 marks.
I mean seriously, get a grip.
I understand that the outcomes-based system promotes equality - ie, it lets more than one person attain full marks, and I can understand the point of this - but it means that you have to learn to 'play the game' - not writing to your full potential, not writing interestingly - but writing so that people who sit on the BOS hear what they want to.
Discuss.
Our Headmaster described the HSC as being like 'a series of driving tests' - where if you say what they want to hear, you get marks.
It's not a test of excellence, where they best essay gets 50 (or lower if the quality isn't there), and all others are judged off that one.
For example, a guy in my English class wrote an exceptionally good essay for Critical Study of Texts, pulling to pieces certain critics crtiques whilst espousing his own view.
And yet, because he did not write that the views he dismissed were still worthy as critiques (BOS requirement) - because that would be entirely contradictory to his exceptional argument - he was docked about 4 marks.
I mean seriously, get a grip.
I understand that the outcomes-based system promotes equality - ie, it lets more than one person attain full marks, and I can understand the point of this - but it means that you have to learn to 'play the game' - not writing to your full potential, not writing interestingly - but writing so that people who sit on the BOS hear what they want to.
Discuss.